sougher
  • sougher
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16 years ago
The most I've ever spent underground is seventy two hours. This was way back at Easter 1955. I joined three other members of my club (Op Mole) in camping down a lead mine located near to the Jugholes system, from Good Friday to Easter Monday. The reason we did this was because the mine, a pipe working, which was large, with masses of passages (some too tiny for us to explore which indicated the use of children - the earliest records of the mine that I have come across date back to 1535), caverns and mine workings, and we had never fully explored it. A through trip of the system normally took over eight hours before we resurfaced and we only ever saw a fraction of the workings, so this decided our decision to spend our Easter underground. I think it was also partly inspired by Geoff Workman who about that time was spending or had spent a much longer time under ground at the Stump Cross show cave at Pateley Bridge. Whilst two of us made the descent to the two hundred foot level, the other two lowered our gear down the main shaft, we started unloading and had made base camp by the time the other two reached us.

We were able to explore a lot more of the mine than previously and roughly surveyed (to CRG basic survey) where we could. After a day passed we noticed our clothes, sleeping bags etc were getting damp, and one of our members lit a fire expecting the smoke to rise up the shaft, what we didn't realise was that on the surface it was a typical wet, damp, cloudy Derbyshire day, consequently instead of the smoke rising, it was pushed back down the shaft and consequently filled the mine instead, so we didn't get much exploration carried out that day until the smoke cleared (a bit like the Red Soil mine murders at Magpie mine in 1833 when the straw was lit below ground, we couldn't help but think about that). We also found our body clocks changing staying awake later and going to bed about 4 a.m. in the morning. However, the highlight of the trip was to be awoken late on Easter Sunday by a cheery whistling and singing, and a faint light bobbing around in the passage by which we'd entered the mine; no it wasn't a "knocker", a "boggart" or a "little green man" but a mad caving friend of ours from Nottingham by name of Frank Sheen (sadly he's now deceased) who knew of our plans and who decided to pay us a suprise visit. Alas for him, half way down to our base camp his carbide lamp had played up, he couldn't get it to work, so fixed a candle onto his helmet (Bevan Boy type) and instead of turning back, he'd carried on and hoped to his good luck that he would encounter us, fortunately for him he did.

To cut a story short, it was most certainly an experience, which we never repeated. I suppose it was an endurance test really as none of us had the modern equipment or caving clothes that are around today, they hadn't been invented. When I see my son's present day caving gear and try to compare it to what we wore and used, there is just no comparison.

I'm sure that there are people on the forum who can far surpass our underground trip, let's hear of your experiences and adventures. My ex No.2 was on the second bottoming party of the Eldon C.C. expedition to the Gouffre Berger in 1962, which I think spent about the same time underground but of course that was purely a caving trip.
Captain Scarlet
16 years ago
Can't get anywhere nesr your time sougher, only about 12hrs for me ๐Ÿ˜ž
STANDBY FOR ACTION!!!!...
davel
  • davel
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16 years ago
A fourteen hour trip exploring and surveying in a cave system near Matienzo in Spain in 1974.

I've never camped underground though.

Dave
jagman
  • jagman
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16 years ago
28 hours.
It was a very big place ๐Ÿ™‚
Peter Burgess
16 years ago
13 hours surveying the Chaldon Quarries back in the 1980s. This was a section of the workings we wanted to knock off in one hit and it took a bit longer than we expected. We normally averaged about 100m of passage an hour and this 700m section was not very straight forward! I guess we failed to get it all done in one go, as I remember we went back about 2 weeks later, and the smell of one person's garlic cheese sandwiches was still there.
Manicminer
16 years ago
Did a 14 hr shift once and the manager changed me onto nightshift for a particular job and I did another 12 hrs - so 26 hrs straight through.
Gold is where you find it
royfellows
16 years ago
Years ago when I was pushing the Caplecleugh High Level I spent 10.5 hours underground solo and in a wet suit for all the day.
Oldham lamp as well, but it lasted me out OK, although I used to fit uprated bulbs.
My avatar is a poor likeness.
derrickman
16 years ago
"Manicminer" wrote:

Did a 14 hr shift once and the manager changed me onto nightshift for a particular job and I did another 12 hrs - so 26 hrs straight through.



ha ha, I know this one.

the 'double shift' - curse of young tunnelling engineers everywhere
''the stopes soared beyond the range of our caplamps' - David Bick...... How times change .... oh, I don't know, I've still got a lamp like that.
magnetic fields
16 years ago
72 hours.........body clock was totally messed up after 24 hours!.
simonrl
  • simonrl
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16 years ago
A feeble 11 or 12 hours for me ๐Ÿ˜ž Must try harder it seems...
my orders are to sit here and watch the world go by
stuey
  • stuey
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16 years ago
Probably around the 9 hours for me.

I'd like to have a proper look at the Milwr Tunnel/etc at some point and after driving all that way, I'd consider underground camping. The "usual" access seems to be a highly regulated run in, around and then out.

October 1/2 term could be good.
Mr Mike
16 years ago
In my student days we used to camp down Smalllcleugh, horribly cold for me, hated it, but did not dare say anything for fear of **** being taken mercilessly.

We used to go up to Nent on the Friday, into the Crown till about midnight, then down SC, and back out middayish on Sunday, 36 hours or so.

Then I discovered that Keith and Hazel rented the cottage next door to the pub, never cold again providing you slept downstairs and put plenty of coal on the fire! ::)
Mr Mike www.mineexplorer.org.uk
ditzy
  • ditzy
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16 years ago
spent 11 hours in lancaster easegill system. got some friends to extend our callout time at bull pot farm. just had a few rests so were very tired climbing out the shaft and walking back to the car :zzz:
camped out in box near jacks for about 8 or 9 hours but we were asleep mostly.
ditzy
  • ditzy
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16 years ago
"stuey" wrote:

I'd like to have a proper look at the Milwr Tunnel/etc at some point and after driving all that way, I'd consider underground camping. The "usual" access seems to be a highly regulated run in, around and then out.



is this open again - who do i contact to get in?
Vanoord
16 years ago
"ditzy" wrote:

is this open again - who do i contact to get in?



As far as I am aware, Milwr is still locked-down.

It looks more likely that access will be regained than it did six months ago, but it's not looking at all promising. ๐Ÿ˜ž
Hello again darkness, my old friend...
stuey
  • stuey
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16 years ago
Am I right in thinking Olwyn Goch shaft is the only one in the whole system that hasn't been massively plugged and backfilled?
Redwinch
16 years ago
"Mr Mike" wrote:



Then I discovered that Keith and Hazel rented the cottage next door to the pub, never cold again providing you slept downstairs and put plenty of coal on the fire! ::)



And had to wake every couple of hours to stoke the fire up again, coal was keep under the stairs? The bathroom had more in common with siberia, if you dared use it. It always seemed to me that part of the cottage was over someone elses house, the kitchen was another thing altogher, encouraged eating in the pub, although the food at the time I stayed was served in "dishes" that were more at home in the cottage hospital for receiving removed testicles, getting too old when things like that seem amusing ๐Ÿ™‚
Still supporting Rampgill. last time I looked
Mr Mike
16 years ago
Base camp in 1989, horrible and fun times at the same time, just look at the special underground clothing we wore....


๐Ÿ”—Smallcleugh-Lead-Mine-Archive-Album-Image-39725[linkphoto]Smallcleugh-Lead-Mine-Archive-Album-Image-39725[/linkphoto][/link]
Mr Mike www.mineexplorer.org.uk
ian S
  • ian S
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16 years ago
And the lovely eighties haircuts :lol:
I am a mole and i live in a hole !
Mr Mike
16 years ago
Oh yes Ian, if you want to see more have a look at the other SC archive photos I uploaded, there's even a leather studded belt - definitely essential equipment
Mr Mike www.mineexplorer.org.uk

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